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Human Rights Watch strives to maintain the highest level of accuracy in our reporting. This includes a commitment to correcting errors or clarifying facts that appear in our publications in a timely fashion. Corrections appear both on this dedicated webpage and at the bottom of the publication that contained the error.
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Recent Corrections
Update (January 7, 2021): Turkey’s parliament voted to approve the draft law without significant modification, and it entered into force on December 31, 2020.
Initially, the text referred to the Central Asia Labour Rights Monitoring Mission, this was corrected to "members of the Central Asia Labour Rights Monitoring Mission".
Correction: The news release was updated to reflect that, “The bill was passed with small modifications after a single debate and entered into force on December 22,” where it previously noted that, “The bill was passed with small modifications after a single debate and will became law as soon as it is published in the Official Gazette.”
The chapter cited the Cuban Center for Human Rights as the source for the number of political prisoners being held by the Cuban government. The text has been corrected to reflect the fact that the figure originally came from the group Prisoners Defenders.
Correction: The news release had improperly stated that the Office of the Prosecutor’s decided that “it is reasonable to believe that crimes against humanity have been committed in Venezuela.” This has been corrected to clarify that “there is a reasonable basis to believe that crimes against humanity have been committed in Venezuela.”
The date of Zam's arrest statement was updated to October 14, 2019.
The number of countries that called on the US to rescind the executive order or lift the sanctions at the November review of the US human rights record in the context of the Universal Periodic Review is ten.
The news release was updated to reflect that Kazakhstan adopted two separate sets of legal amendments concerning reporting obligations of nongovernmental organizations, in December 2015 and in July 2016.
The name of Mohamed Ali Bouchiba's group has been updated to "Bloggers Without Chains."
An earlier version of this story contained an incorrect sub-headline.